Iquitos - Mercado Belen y Casas Flotantes (Peru) - Video Documental
Iquitos (Belén) Perú
Un paseo en canoa en los rios de belén (iquitos) en el Amazonas Peruano.
Belén, la Venecia amazónica de Iquitos, Perú
Conociendo el barrio de Belén, uno de los lugares más visitados y más pobres de Iquitos.
Belén es llamado también la Venecia amazónica porque en ciertas temporadas el pueblo se inunda y la única forma de movilizarse es en bote.
También estuvimos en el mercado de Belén, uno de los más concurridos por turistas y locales, y vimos productos de la Amazonía.
Por último, observamos cómo se comía el suri una larva gruesa y viva antes de convertirse en escarabajo.
¡Disfruten el video!
BELÉN La Venecia De La Selva Peruana
Belén es uno de los distritos mas poblados de la ciudad de Iquitos, conocido por su gran mercado que con orgullo lleva su propio nombre Belén. Este vídeo fue hecho por los alumnos de la Facultad De Ciencia De La Educación Y Humanidades
Art, a Bridge to Health in Belen, Iquitos, Peru
This video is part of new efforts by the Pan American Health Organization to promote health through art in collaboration with partner organizations including Gesundheit!, Bolaroja Association, La Restinga Association and others, within the framework of PAHO's Faces, Voices and Places Initiative for the Millennium Development Goals.
Recorriendo un mercado amazónico ???? | Mercado de Belén, Iquitos, Perú
Acompáñanos a uno de los mercados más alucinantes del mundo, el Mercado de Belén, en Iquitos, en plena amazonía peruana. Probamos licores afrodisíacos como el siete veces sin sacar, conocimos de cerca el pescado prehistórico (carachama) y comimos un gusano típico de la zona, el suri de aguaje.
PERU - BELEN VILLAGE NEAR IQUITOS (PART 2) - FULL HD
PERU - BELEN VILAGE - IQUITOS
Belén District is one of thirteen districts of the Maynas Province in Peru. Belén lies at the edge of the city of Iquitos, in the floodplain of the Itaya River. It is home to some 65,000 people, most of them poor, and many of whom live in extreme poverty. The housing has neither clean water, proper sanitation, nor electric power distribution.
Many of the residents of Belén are people who lived in the forest, but who came to Iquitos in search of work and formal education for themselves and their families. Nevertheless, unemployment rates are high. Men might hunt, fish, or trade for their livelihood, while women resell small quantities of produce, such as aguaje. Some of those with more means shuttle goods via small motorboats between the forest hamlets and the city, dealing in such commodities as coffee, rice, sugar, gasoline, forest crops, and animal products. Uphill of the river is Mercado Belén, a large, open-air marketplace where vendors sell produce, meat, fish, spices, flowers, folk medicine, prepared foods, and manufactured goods. Brick-and-mortar storefronts also line the streets of the marketplace.
An estimated 60,000 people more live across the river in outlying areas, also without electricity, water, or sanitation. Most homes either float or are built on stilts, as the river level rises 5–6 meters from February through July. Travel books have described Belén as the “Venice of Latin America”. In Pueblo Libre, a section of Belén on the waterfront, approximately 14,000 people - 30% of whom are under age 12-live in a busy river port, where charcoal, bananas, fish, and other goods are brought (mostly by canoe) to be distributed and sold throughout Belén.
The people of Belén live in overcrowded conditions. 90% of homes house two or more families; some homes as many as five. The people of Belén are at risk for contracting malaria, dengue fever, water-borne illnesses, respiratory illnesses, tuberculosis, and HIV. They are also affected by social problems of severe poverty, such as alcoholism, crime, prostitution, unemployment, domestic violence, and child abuse. Years of deteriorating conditions in Belén have fostered widespread frustration and hopelessness among the residents.
#Peru #Belen #belenvillage #iquitos #rainforest #jungle #towninjungle #towninrainforest #southamerica #bosoprzezświat #cejrowski #tryb4death #amazonriver #amazonrainforest
MERCADO BELEN -IQUITOS -PERÚ x KLEY ALCOR
Iquitos, el puerto fluvial de Belén
Iquitos: El puerto fluvial de Belén, en el Amazonas
Filmación 2007
El puerto de Belen tiene una profundidad mayor que el de Nanay, por ello admite barcos de mayor calado; a corta distancia se encuentra el astillero más importante de Iquitos, donde se ven construir barcos de cabotaje atlántico. Si Nanay es el puerto turístico y pesquero, Belén es el puerto de mercancías y de viajeros. En cierto modo, hace las veces de mercado central de la ciudad de Iquitos, pues en él se asientan las mercancías al por mayor, recién importadas cada mañana de las haciendas en la selva.
Otros vídeos en este canal:
Tales From the Road: The Most Exotic South American Market- Belen, Iquitos
#Belen #market is a truly fascinating place where you can find all sorts of oddities ranging from clothes to monkeys (dead or alive). Its isolation and proximity to the #jungle has allowed it to maintain its truly exotic nature unlike many of the markets that have sold out to become legitimate tourist enterprises. This is a real feel of local commerce. We show you some of the crazier stuff we found at the back of the market in this video, but be sure to check out the following two videos because that wasn't the end of our crazy Belen experience.
I'm Ivan the Intrepid, a budget travel and lifestyle blogger... person. I'm currently traveling Colombia and Peru and will be posting some goofy vlog posts until I get back home and can put together some more useful posts. Be sure to subscribe and check out some of my other projects:
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BELEN - IQUITOS (La Venecia Peruana)
Estimados Mauri y Jesus...resulto muy interesante la inclusion de La Venecia Peruana en mi ultima visita a Iquitos... gusto muchísimo a los amigos que me acompañaron y creo seria una buena opción para los pax, pues es como estar en otro mundo y no se repite en el itinerario y ves a la amazonia peruana y su gente desde la perspectiva peruana... Éxitos en vuestro viaje!!!
PERU - BELEN VILLAGE NEAR IQUITOS (PART 1) - (Full HD)
Belén District is one of thirteen districts of the Maynas Province in Peru. Belén lies at the edge of the city of Iquitos, in the floodplain of the Itaya River. It is home to some 65,000 people, most of them poor, and many of whom live in extreme poverty. The housing has neither clean water, proper sanitation, nor electric power distribution.
Many of the residents of Belén are people who lived in the forest, but who came to Iquitos in search of work and formal education for themselves and their families. Nevertheless, unemployment rates are high. Men might hunt, fish, or trade for their livelihood, while women resell small quantities of produce, such as aguaje. Some of those with more means shuttle goods via small motorboats between the forest hamlets and the city, dealing in such commodities as coffee, rice, sugar, gasoline, forest crops, and animal products. Uphill of the river is Mercado Belén, a large, open-air marketplace where vendors sell produce, meat, fish, spices, flowers, folk medicine, prepared foods, and manufactured goods. Brick-and-mortar storefronts also line the streets of the marketplace.
An estimated 60,000 people more live across the river in outlying areas, also without electricity, water, or sanitation. Most homes either float or are built on stilts, as the river level rises 5–6 meters from February through July. Travel books have described Belén as the “Venice of Latin America”. In Pueblo Libre, a section of Belén on the waterfront, approximately 14,000 people - 30% of whom are under age 12-live in a busy river port, where charcoal, bananas, fish, and other goods are brought (mostly by canoe) to be distributed and sold throughout Belén.
The people of Belén live in overcrowded conditions. 90% of homes house two or more families; some homes as many as five. The people of Belén are at risk for contracting malaria, dengue fever, water-borne illnesses, respiratory illnesses, tuberculosis, and HIV. They are also affected by social problems of severe poverty, such as alcoholism, crime, prostitution, unemployment, domestic violence, and child abuse. Years of deteriorating conditions in Belén have fostered widespread frustration and hopelessness among the residents.
#Peru #Belen #belenvillage #iquitos #rainforest #jungle #towninjungle #towninrainforest #southamerica #bosoprzezświat #cejrowski #tryb4death #amazonriver #amazonrainforest
Huge Catfish Sliced and Chopped at Belen Street Food Market in Iquitos, Peru
Ecobarrio Belén // Iquitos -Perú //
El Barrio de Belén, llamado la Venecia de la Selva,se encuentra ubicado en la ciudad de Iquitos, levantándose sobre las aguas del río Itaya, que forma parte del Sistema Hidrográfico del Amazonas, donde sólo se puede transitar en canoas o a nado.
Las casas que conforman el Barrio descansan, en la mayoría de casos sobre balsas que permiten a las viviendas flotar en épocas de crecida de río y asentarse en la tierra en época de sequía, así como viviendas sobre pilotes de hasta 5mts de altura.
El diseño del conjunto relaciona e integra estética y funcionalmente a tres tipos de viviendas tan diferentes pero a la vez fundamentales en el territorio de la selva, así como equipamientos recreativos, educacionales, comerciales y de salud, que abastecen a todo el complejo habitacional.
Música_ Miki Gonzáles_Bienvenidos a la Amazonía
Proyecto: Ofelia Vera Piazzini
El éxodo de Belén: Barrio de Iquitos se muda (Cuarto Poder)
Fuente: América Televisión
Fecha de emisión: 01/05/2016
Living in Iquitos -1 The Belen Market
This is the first segment of a new series of short videos on Living in Iquitos. Iquitos Peru sits deep in the jungle of Peru on the Amazon River. It is the largest city in the world with no road to it, if you want to go to Iquitos you have to go by boat or by plane. Living in Iquitos is like stepping back a 100 years into the wild wild west. Hope you enjoy.
Chopping Crocodile Meat, Alligators and Caimans at Belen Street Market in Iquitos, Peru
Street Food of South America.
Located in Iquitos – a city only reachable by air or along the Amazon River – Belen Market is a sight to behold. The floating slum and street market of Belen is the dangerous in the Peruvian Amazon. The Belen Market is a huge, third world outdoor “super” market that covers 20 blocks or more. Everything that can be bought or sold is bought and sold there. You can find pork, crocodile, alligators and caimans meat cooked on the street
Belen Market (Mercado Belen), Amazon--Iquitos, Peru
Iquito's Belen Market (Mercado Belen), the biggest and most diverse market in the Peruvian Amazon, covers over 20 blocks. Early in the morning people arrive from jungle villages to sell their produce. Located close to the banks of the rio Itaya, a tributary to the Amazon, untold goods arrive from the jungles depths...
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If you like the Belen Market, you can see the Gringo Shaman shopping there in this video about the Gringo Shaman of the Amazon:
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Your boat is leaving port, get Travel Heroic:
IQUITOS, BELEN MARKET, & AMAZON, PERU
Iquitos, Peru
De Iquitos su juerga: las noches de full diversión en la selva
Combinado regresó a Iquitos, tierra calurosa que nos recibe siempre con mucha diversión. No te pierdas esta nota.